Tag: Judiciary

40 Undercover Informants and Agents Monitoring the Proud Boys on Jan. 6, Court Papers Allege

At least 40 undercover police officers, informants, and federal agents monitored the Proud Boys on Jan. 6, 2021, a new federal court filing alleges. Proud Boys defendant Dominic Pezzola filed a motion on April 5 seeking to compel federal prosecutors to “reveal all informants, undercover operatives and other confidential human sources [CHSs] relating to the…


Signature Bank Executives Allegedly Sold $100 Million in Stock During Crypto Surge: WSJ

Executives and directors at the recently failed Signature Bank allegedly sold more than $100 million in stock during the crypto boom. Senior bank insiders have been accused of participating in this scheme for three years leading up to the bank’s collapse in early March, according an analysis by The Wall Street Journal. Signature Bank collapsed on…


Supreme Court Rejects Lawsuit Brought by Man Who Served 24 Years for Rapes He Did Not Commit

The Supreme Court decided against hearing the wrongful conviction lawsuit of a Wisconsin man who spent 24 years behind bars for two rapes he did not commit. The Court denied the petition of Daryl Holloway on April 3 in an unsigned order without explaining why. No justices dissented. A petition is granted and oral arguments…


Amish Farmer Challenges Constitutionality of Federal Firearms License

Amish dairy farmer Reuben King’s farm in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, was raided on Jan. 12, 2022, by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), which charged King with dealing in firearms without a license and confiscated 615 guns. An undercover ATF agent bought five guns from King between October 2019 and March 2020,…


John Ratcliffe: Law Schools Will Use Indictment as Example of Prosecutorial Overreach

Former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said Tuesday that graduate schools offering studies leading to a law degree will use the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office case against Donald Trump as an example to teach students what not to do. Ratcliffe, an attorney who served as national intelligence director from 2020 to 2021, said the…


PREMIERING 4 PM ET: Trump Indictment Isn’t the First Time the Ruling Class Has Weaponized the Judicial System | Truth Over News

The indictment of former president Donald Trump marks a whole new chapter in the weaponization of the justice system to pursue political enemies. But it is not the first time this has been done—and not the first time Trump has been the focus of such abuses. The case against General Michael Flynn was perhaps even…


PREMIERING NOW: Trump Indictment Isn’t the First Time the Ruling Class Has Weaponized the Judicial System | Truth Over News

The indictment of former president Donald Trump marks a whole new chapter in the weaponization of the justice system to pursue political enemies. But it is not the first time this has been done—and not the first time Trump has been the focus of such abuses. The case against General Michael Flynn was perhaps even…


Trump Indictment Isn’t the First Time the Ruling Class Has Weaponized the Judicial System | Truth Over News

The indictment of former president Donald Trump marks a whole new chapter in the weaponization of the justice system to pursue political enemies. But it is not the first time this has been done—and not the first time Trump has been the focus of such abuses. The case against General Michael Flynn was perhaps even…


Leonardo DiCaprio Says CCP-Linked Financier Planned to Donate $30 Million to Obama’s 2012 Campaign

Malaysian financier Jho Low planned to donate up to $30 million to help former U.S. President Barack Obama’s 2012 reelection campaign, according to actor Leonardo DiCaprio. DiCaprio recounted a discussion he had with Low, whose given name is Low Taek Jho, while testifying during a federal trial in Washington. “It was a casual conversation about…


Judge Clears Lawsuit Against Major University Over Campus Shutdown During Pandemic

Students who sued the University of Delaware over its abrupt, complete shift to online classes during the COVID-19 pandemic have scored another win, with a judge agreeing that their lawsuit can move forward as a class action. The school, which has about 17,000 students, in the spring of 2020 stopped all in-person classes and soon…